Disaster Out Of Control Inflation: It Now Takes At Least $177,798 For A Family Of 4 To Live Comfortably In The U.S.


I never imagined that we would ever see a time when it takes $177,798 for a family of four to live comfortably in the United States. Unfortunately, that day has arrived. Our leaders have been pursuing highly inflationary policies for many years, and now we have reached a point where inflation is wildly out of control. In fact, the latest wholesale inflation figure that was released on Tuesday came in much higher than expected. Sadly, this is just the beginning and we are in far more trouble than most people realize.

According to an incredibly shocking new study, most Americans do not make enough money to “live comfortably” in the highly inflationary environment that we find ourselves in today…

A recent study has revealed the incomes needed for families to live comfortably across the United States – and the stark contrast in the cost of living between states is startling.
The study revealed that in the most expensive states, families need nearly $300,000 to simply live ‘comfortably.’
The least expensive state requires about half that salary – still over $100,000.
Meanwhile, the average annual salary in the US is $59,428, or $28.34 per hour, as of May 2024.

The study determined that Massachusetts is the most expensive state.

It takes a whopping $301,184 a year for a family of four to “live comfortably” there.

The least expensive state is Mississippi.

In the Magnolia State, it only takes $177,798 a year for a family of four “to cover their expenses and maintain a satisfactory quality of life”.

This is our country now.

I feel like I have been banging my head into a wall. For more than a decade I have warned that this would happen, and now it is here.

And even more inflation is on the way

Americans already contending with persistent and stubbornly high inflation just got more unwelcome news on Tuesday: There are more price hikes likely coming down the pike.
Wholesale inflation picked up in April to its highest rate in a year, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Tuesday.

In April, inflation at the wholesale level jumped 0.5 percent in just one month…

Inflation at the wholesale level rose much more than expected in April, the latest sign that price pressures within the economy remain elevated and difficult to tame.
The Labor Department said Tuesday that its producer price index, which measures inflation at the wholesale level before it reaches consumers, rose 0.5% in April from the previous month.

If you multiply that figure by 12 months, you get 6 percent.

And of course you need to approximately double any number that the Biden administration gives us in order to come up with a figure that is anywhere close to accurate.

By now, just about everyone realizes that the rate of inflation in this country is massively understated.

For example, Joe Biden insists that the rate of inflation has been “low” for quite some time, but home prices have risen by more than 47 percent since the start of this decade…

Home prices have surged 47.1% since the start of 2020, easily outstripping the gains seen in recent decades.
That’s according to a recent analysis by ResiClub of the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index, which showed that house prices in the 1990s and 2010s grew a respective 30.1% and 44.7%.

Let’s all be honest with one another.

The truth is that we are in the midst of a raging cost of living crisis that has no end in sight.

And this should not surprise any of us. Our politicians continue to borrow and spend trillions upon trillions of dollars, and all of this borrowing and spending is extremely inflationary…

An economic specter haunts America. It’s also one that many American politicians – Republican and Democrat – say a great deal about but are reluctant to address.
The name of that shadow is the United States National Debt: what the US Treasury Department defines as “the amount of money the Federal Government has borrowed to cover the outstanding balance of expenses incurred over time.”
If you go to the Treasury’s website, you can see just how big that debt is. In mid-May, it was 34.5 trillion dollars. The pace of the growth in that debt is equally stunning. Approximately 1 trillion dollars is being added to America’s National Debt every 100 days.

Borrowing and spending another trillion dollars every 100 days is a completely and utterly insane thing to do.

We really are in the endgame.

Today, Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned that interest rates may have to stay high for an extended period of time in order to fight inflation…

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Tuesday that “it may take longer than expected” for high interest rates to lower inflation and gave no hint that a recently slowing labor market could mean earlier rate cuts.
“We’ll need to be patient and let restrictive policy do its work,” Powell said during a session at a Foreign Bankers Association meeting in Amsterdam. “It may be that (high interest rates) take longer than expected to do its work and bring inflation down.”

So far, higher rates have not solved our cost of living crisis, and that is because our politicians continue to spend money like drunken sailors.

But higher rates are crushing the overall economy.

Yesterday, I wrote about the “restaurant apocalypse” that is starting to sweep across America.

Today, it got even worse.

We just learned that at least 99 Red Lobster locations have been shut down and will be auctioned off…

At least 99 locations of Red Lobster are being auctioned off amid questions about the stalwart seafood chain’s long-term future.

In a post Monday on LinkedIn, Neal Sherman, founder and CEO of TAGeX Brands, a liquidation firm, announced he was leading the closure of more than 50 Red Lobster locations, with the restaurants’ equipment to be auctioned off.

A web page dedicated to the liquidations showed closure locations across the U.S. including in Denver; Indianapolis; Rochester, New York; Sacramento, California; San Antonio; and San Diego.
On Tuesday, Restaurant Business Magazine reported 99 locations were closing.

For the Red Lobster workers that just lost their jobs, the end came very suddenly

A third Red Lobster employee took the news in stride, posting: ‘red lobster just laid all of us off without notice and closed for good LMAOO.’

The employee added in replied that Red Lobster didn’t tell managers until 8am yesterday.

Of course it isn’t just restaurant chains that are closing locations.

In fact, even Walmart is closing stores and auctioning off inventory…

After announcing that it would be shutting its doors for good, one Ohio Walmart auctioned off its remaining inventory, including flat-screen televisions, laptops and furniture, for a bargain.

The Walmart at 3579 S. High St. in Columbus opted not to renew its lease in a once-bustling strip plaza. Representatives announced the closure in February, claiming the store had failed to ‘meet financial expectations’.

Last week, the store offloaded its merchandise through a liquidation auction. Bidding closed the morning of May 10, with some items like laptops going for under $20.

If interest rates stay high, we are going to see a lot more of this sort of thing.

But the Federal Reserve is very hesitant to cut rates at this point because of the cost of living crisis.

Officials at the Fed really are caught in a “deer in the headlights” moment right now.

But no matter which way they ultimately choose to go, in the short-term more “stagflation” is ahead.

And in the long-term, the exceedingly foolish policies that our leaders have been pursuing are going to result in a systemic collapse of absolutely epic proportions.
 
Average studio apartment in Portland Oregon- $1600 a month.

Average studio apartment in Seattle Washington - $1500 a month

Average studio apartment in San Francisco California - $2200 a month

This is for a single person, not including utilities, food, transportation, insurance etc. That same studio apartment for a single person averages roughly $800 a month in Jacksonville Florida, $850 in Little Rock Arkansas and $900 in Akron Ohio

Gee, it’s almost as if extremist leftist politics turn once thriving cities into uninhabitable shitholes. Granted fingers can be pointed at dipshit millennials and zoomers who have no idea how to make a budget and blow all their money on Starbucks and the latest iPhone, but the boomers making those claims are only partially right. Inflation and rent control really has gotten out of hand, but unsurprisingly it’s at its worst in leftist run cities.
 
There's been a lot of inflation, but if you're struggling to keep your kids fed and enjoy basic creature comforts on nearly $200k a year, you're a fucking idiot.
Yea, I found out much of this issue turns out to be a spending issue. People spending more than their means, or if you're a single mom with kids or something.
 
I did the math on my Dad's salary from the early 90's, we were comfortably middle class. Using the CPI, we'd be about $50k short of what's needed for that lifestyle today.

So that logically means real inflation has been understated by at least 1% per year since the early 90's. Doesn't sound like much but it's accumulated to the point by now it's a 36% decrease in real income. That's like real incomes falling back to the levels of the mid-70's, no wonder people are struggling and think the economy sucks!

Coincidentally, that % shortfall is also around the maximum share of your income that should go to housing costs.
 
There's been a lot of inflation, but if you're struggling to keep your kids fed and enjoy basic creature comforts on nearly $200k a year, you're a fucking idiot.
Oh I agree. There are a lot of fucking idiots here in Silicon Valley that make aroound that much and live payckeck to pay check.

I've seen this first hand.
 
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I know everyone is shitting on this article going full boomer, "hurr durr muh Ipads and yearly Dusneyland" but Healthcare and childcare are expensive as fuck.

Most people struggle to afford a single child let alone two.

It probably does take near a six figure income to comfortably raise two kids in a house with a car unless you live in a nigger shithole.
Six figures can also be pushing it if you're trying to do stuff like private school, which is sort of a must if you don't want to deal with public school's 'diversity' hurting your kids. So that's like $10k for each kid, which then also means having to worry about transportation.

So having a single bread winner earning six figures doesn't necessarily mean your family is living the sweet life as you have stuff like that taking out huge chunks of your income.
 
Do you ever get the feeling that the people writing these studies have different definitions of-

They do. It's like those people that try to buy healthy food on a budget in order to claim it's impossible. But they bought $7 organic strawberries, expensive cuts of meat and overpriced name brands. You know, instead of getting clearance and sale items, store brands and knowing how to shop around because rice at this store is cheap but their vegetables cost more than the store over there. They're all morons who have never had to scrape together $20 for a week of groceries and somehow make it last and not be all ramen and store brand Cheetos.
 
They do. It's like those people that try to buy healthy food on a budget in order to claim it's impossible. But they bought $7 organic strawberries, expensive cuts of meat and overpriced name brands. You know, instead of getting clearance and sale items, store brands and knowing how to shop around because rice at this store is cheap but their vegetables cost more than the store over there. They're all morons who have never had to scrape together $20 for a week of groceries and somehow make it last and not be all ramen and store brand Cheetos.
Had a college professor that thought this kind of way and insisted that everyone do so. Never mind that college students literally cannot afford going to Whole Foods or Farmer's Markets all the time. I usually have a decent opinion on professors seeing as how I went to a state school and thus, they had to moderate their wokeness more, but not this one as she absolutely was the out-of-touch liberal stereotype.
 
fake and gay. thats 390 dollars a day spent on average LOL (I subtracted the amount you should save per this retarded article)
also lets not forget the average kid haver gets loads of gibsmedats
also yeah the article mentions red lobster shutting down like thats some kind of coal mine canary but you can easily spend 150 bucks there on a date. Fuck red lobster.
 
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Around my area, There is no 'clearance' food now except $70 steaks marked down to $50 and $6 white bread marked down to $3. That's if there's even that.
I can't compete against migrants with food stamps and 70 year old pensioners that are clearing things out 2 hours before I even get off work in the morning.
My choices are Walmart, Kroger and Aldi... Not even Aldi can save us, its all regular prices now, if you can get in on stock day before its picked through (Wednesday here). Costco actually works for some stuff, if you can afford to buy bulk.
Its not great and I am starting to notice supply chain issues too.
 
Its not great and I am starting to notice supply chain issues too.
But but it was COVID causing supply chain issues I was told, and totally not the just in time shit that everyone switched too because Corporations are too retarded to want to spend money for warehouse space!
 
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To put into perspective how insanely retarded the economy has gotten in less than a decade.

Shortly before corona I was able to purchase what would be good considered a good family starter home in a nonshithole part of a major American city on a $30k/yr income.

Today you would need an income of around $100k/yr assuming youre going fha/va and not putting down 20%.
 
But but it was COVID causing supply chain issues I was told, and totally not the just in time shit that everyone switched too because Corporations are too retarded to want to spend money for warehouse space!
I remember hearing these supply chain issues would be gone in 2023-2024 but in my industry, certain parts that used to have 3-4 week lead times before 2020 went to about 30 weeks in 2021-2022 and now we’re told things are fixed now…at 24-26 weeks and this is as good as it’s going to get from now on.
 
I am 30 years old. I have never felt this uncomfortable about the economy as I have now. I mean fuck dude. I bought my first house when I was 23 for 47k

47K!!!

I sold it a few years ago, but it was a decent place. Small, but it didn't really have many issues except a sagging floor which I paid someone to fix.

My gf and I have been house hunting and we look at houses for 180k in WORSE CONDITION now that are roughly the same square footage.

Genuinely it's the only bad thing. I don't give a fuck about shrinkflation, it's the fucking mortgage, genuinely never thought I'd see the day when mortgages outpaced rent.

Our apartment is actually up for sale, we looked at the price and after running some numbers the mortgage for our apartment would be $300-$400 more than our rent.

It's crazy. Hope wages catch up soon.
 
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